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The Edge of the World

Page 40

by Kevin J. Anderson


  "Not 'simple,' " Asaddan cautioned. "But possible."

  "Wonderful!" Imir exclaimed. "Perfectly wonderful, my dear. I knew that if anyone could find a solution, it would be you. How I wish Uraba had more treasures such as yourself. Therefore, I have a reward for you. You have lived your life vicariously, and I have enjoyed your tales. But now I offer you the chance of a lifetime: Come with us. You and I will peel back the mysteries of the world."

  Sherufa quailed at the thought; she had never even left Olabar. She read about grand quests and epic journeys, but preferred to experience them from her armchair, looking at books and maps rather than enduring storms and privation. "It is not necessary, Imir. I will help you to plan--"

  He waved her off. "None of that! A twelve-year-old boy is eager to come, so it's perfectly safe. Come now, remember all those stories you told me? I know this is what you want. Believe me, you won't regret it."

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  436 Kevin J. Anderson

  Sherufa was not so certain.

  Asaddan drew a breath, sounding like a blacksmith's bellows, and looked with sincere gratitude toward Imir and Sherufa. "If one man with a few animals can make the journey, certainly a flying ship with all the resources of Uraba is much better. We will be fine."

  Istar lay next to Omra at night, listening to breezes stir the silk hangings at the balcony and windows. "He should go, Omra. He wants to go."

  "If my father considers it safe, then I will consider it safe," Omra answered. "It will be good for the boy to experience new things. He can take care of himself--I've seen him do it. But even now that we have a new son, my heir, I insist on finding an appropriate and important place for Saan. He is..." Omra was at a loss for words.

  Istar felt no edge of bitterness when she spoke. "You have always been good to Saan. I never expected that when I agreed to marry you."

  She could barely see his wry smile in the shadows of the bedchamber. "I love our two daughters, and, yes, the new baby is my only male heir. Even so, you know how I feel about Saan."

  "Yes." Istar nodded. "I do.

  Work crews prepared for departure on the caravan south toward Missinia. Carts were loaded with reeds harvested from marshes in the lowlands of Abilan. Pack animals were harnessed. Sikaras burned prayer strips asking for good weather and a safe journey. Istar would stay behind in the palace to tend her new baby, assisted by her dedicated handmaiden, a doe-eyed young woman named Altiara. Istar's two daughters were now old enough to be in traditional school, and Adreala--the older one--would soon

  I be brought to the Urecari church for her second testing, to see if

  she was worthy of becoming a sikara herself.

  As golden morning sunlight slanted through the open windows, Saan came to say goodbye to his mother. His clothes were already packed and loaded aboard the caravan. Istar had selected the garments herself, remembering what Windcatch fishermen used to wear when they set off on long voyages. Though Saan brought one set of fine clothes in case he needed to meet with important Nunghal nobles, Istar chose the rest of his garments for durability, knowing the arduous journey that lay in store for him.

  Saan proudly displayed a new medallion around his neck, toying with its leather thong. "The soldan-shah gave me this." He I urned it in his fingers so that it caught the sunlight. "He told me to wear it, and to think about him, and Olabar, and Urec. We will go to these new lands and bring Urec's Log to the Nunghals. We will teach them the truth."

  As always, Istar held her past close to herself, though the curling spiral of the unfurling fern often unnerved her. "Two brothers sailed from Terravitae. Perhaps you should also mention Aiden."

  Saan scowled. "But I hate the Aidenists! We know the terrible tilings they've done."

  In the boy's eyes, Istar saw a hint of the raiders storming the streets of Windcatch, burning the small kirk that Prester Fennan could not defend. They had killed old Telha without mercy; they had captured her, dragged her across half the world. "Terrible things have been done by both sides, Saan."

  He seemed offended by her suggestion. "Nothing so bad as what they do to us. Think about the bloodbath in Outer Wahilir--Soldan Attar, his family, more than a hundred nobles and merchants, all poisoned by an Aidenist assassin! And all those churches burned, the villages attacked."

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  "Saan, you are old enough to realize there are two sides to any story. You know that I originally came from Tierra. I did not ask to be brought here."

  Saan challenged his mother, staring at her in disbelief. "But you were a slave--and now you're the wife of the soldan-shah. You live in a palace. Think of all the wonders we have! My little brother is the zarif of Uraba. You were saved from a lifetime of ignorance and squalor!"

  Istar picked up the baby and held him in a soft blanket in her arms. She sat back in a chair and regarded Saan. "Do not believe everything you've heard. A happy life is not necessarily based on appearances and possessions." She gazed at the peacefully sleeping baby, who was now six months old.

  "You cannot deny that the soldan-shah loves you, Mother. I can see that this pleases you every time you look at him."

  She nodded slowly, taking care not to show a flicker in her expression. "Yes, you're right." Yes, she had gained a measure of contentment in her life here in Uraba, with her children, her position in the palace. She could not admit that she was happy--a hard part of her would never allow that--but she was not as unhappy as she had tried to make herself believe for the past seven years.

  Istar longed to tell Saan the truth as she stroked the infant's smooth head. She had asked Omra to name the boy Criston, and he had allowed it, not knowing what it meant to her. She had never revealed the identity of her true husband, and she had-- thankfully--found an obscure reference to another sailor called "Criston" in the scripture of Urec's Log. No one else would know.

  "Just remember," she told Saan. "You do not have all the information."

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  Iboria

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  The Arkship was under construction--the most magnificent vessel men had ever dared to build. Kjelnar had at first trembled at the responsibility of overseeing the project, and now he reveled in it. It was not hubris, but respect. No one had ever attempted such a titanic work to honor Ondun's creation and Aiden's quest, and every aspect of the majestic ship had to be perfect, the best.

  In the dense Iborian pine forests, Kjelnar had spent all his life walking the paths, studying the trees, and marking specimens of particular interest to him. Expanses of dark evergreens covered the northern wilderness, but Kjelnar imagined that he had seen them all. With a long knotted string, he measured the circumferences of the trunks. He stared upward, using a bob and measuring stick to plumb the straightness of the trees. Only the perfect... the best.

  He'd had his eye on this particular tree for much of his life, waiting to find a use sufficiently grand for such a specimen. A tree like this could not be used in just any ship, but as the main mast for King Korastine's new Arkship. There could be no greater glory.

  Back in Galay, the king had cleared Shipbuilders' Bay of other projects so that the sawmills, dry dock, and cranes could be used lor the Arkship. Some of the merchants' harbors and part of the Naedran District had been commandeered to continue work on refitting warships and building new ones.

  Kjelnar had never before constructed such a large, ambitious vessel. He spent nearly two years bringing the enormous proj

  ect to this point: drawing up the detailed plan for the Arkship, building models, supervising the construction of new dry docks, erecting superstructures, cranes, blocks and tackle, everything the giant vessel would need. Seasoned wood was floated down from Iboria, each log chosen by him and cut by the sawmills into the lumber that would be needed.

  Kjelnar supervised the laying of the Arkship's keel, using the best seasoned wood. Although many Calay dockworkers volunteered their labors, Kjelnar hand-picked Iborian workmen to trim, steam, and bend the beams, then carve them t
o perfection. The first sets of the great ribs were set in place, so the Arkship looked like the skeleton of an enormous beast.

  Satisfied with the Arkship's progress and knowing that his crews could continue their work without him, Kjelnar returned to the forests of Iboria so that these loggers could cut down the main tree.

  He led a crew of burly Iborian woodcutters on an expedition deep inland, needing to be there himself, to guide the work and contribute his own sweat. Pride in workmanship allowed him to steer no other course. He and his team followed a river upstream, then branched off into a dense valley carved by a swift creek. The mainmast tree stood like a sentinel at the head of the side drainage, and even from a distance, Kjelnar admired the pine. It stood like nature's obelisk before the imagined kirk of the wilderness.

  Leaving their shallow boats on the boulders at the rocky edge of the rushing creek, his men trudged through the underbrush. Wiping sweat out of his eyes, brushing mosquitoes away from his face, the shipwright guided them along winding trails used only by animals, remembering the path to his prize. When they reached the base of the kingly tree, the Iborian treecutters nodded their approval and clapped Kjelnar on his broad back.

  "That is a worthy tree," said Ragnal, one of the bearded northmen.

  On the hike up the basin, Kjelnar had begun calculating the best way to bring the great pine down to the main river; the wide creek was swollen with runoff, but too many large rocks and abrupt falls would hinder its passage. The men would have to guide the giant tree along the valley's edge, using the creek when possible and the bank when necessary. It would be an arduous journey, taking many days, but his men were strong. And they were doing this for Aiden.

  When the group reached the end of the valley at the headwaters of the creek, Kjelnar explained his plan, and the men deferred to him, since he had more expertise in cutting and moving logs than any other Iborian. To prepare a path for the tree's passage, he told the men to cut down other trees and clear the way. The logs they felled would have been prime wood for construction; here, though, the men laid them down as rollers and guides to move the mainmast tree.

  While the crew did the preparatory work, Kjelnar climbed the majestic pine until he was high above the other treetops, holding on to the trunk and looking up to the sky, the cold mountains, the extensive dark forests, marveling at the glory of Ondun. Working his way back down, he sawed off branches, and when the tree stood stripped of its boughs, it already looked like a towering mast. Staring at the immense, perfect trunk, he knew he had made the right choice. It was time.

  At the tree's base, the men used their axes to cut a deep gouge and then set to work with their saws. The loggers did the backbreaking work in shifts. Buckets were hauled from the stream to dump on the hot saw blades so they could keep going. They cut for nearly a full day before the giant pine teetered, then sur

  rendered to gravity. It bent, slowly at first, then picked up speed, falling gracefully and precisely where Kjelnar had directed.

  The men rushed forward, working together, muscles straining, to align the huge trunk onto the roller logs; next they began the arduous journey of moving it several feet at a time. Every step had to be done perfectly. After two days, they built a new camp, and worked again the following day, and the next. By the time the mainmast tree reached the river, the men were exhausted to the point of collapse.

  But Kjelnar would not let them stop. They needed to get the tree into the water and follow it downstream with their boats. They could rest during the voyage to Calay. He admired the exceptional tree as the crew wrestled it into the deeper water, already envisioning the finished Arkship, which had haunted his dreams for two years now.

  Yes, it was perfect. The best.

  y / Ishalem

  After his glorious achievement in Tener--more than a hundred Urecari poisoned, including Soldan Attar, his two wives, and several children--Prester Hannes was in less of a hurry to return to Galay. He still had so much to accomplish.

  He had remained there until he burned another Urecari church along with its sikara and its congregation. For years now, his legend had grown. Mothers told stories to their children about a shadowman who killed the "faithful," who burned churches and poisoned their leaders. There was no holy ground, no safe place for them. Hannes liked the fact that they were scared.

  The delusions of their faith made them blind to what he was doing, and why. Fearful, the people turned against anyone who looked remotely Tierran, and many scapegoats were killed. But they died for a good cause.

  Still, his extravagant bloodbaths in Tener sparked such outrage that he had become exceptionally careful. He had been glimpsed too many times over the years. Though he now wore different clothes, he was still a stranger, and strangers were looked upon with suspicion and fear. Travel was dangerous for him.

  He moved north past the city of Khenara until at last he reached Ishalem. Ishalem! A burned ruin... a wasteland where once a great city had stood.

  Many years had passed since the great fire, but the wound had festered rather than healed. When Hannes saw the blackened hills, the outlines of streets, the fossils of collapsed buildings, his hatred for the Urecari grew beyond measure. How could Ondun ever forgive them for the damage they had done?

  After more than a decade, the city remained a graveyard. Even in the best of times, the rocky soil of the isthmus had been unsuitable for growing enough crops to feed more than a small population, and only scrub brush had grown back since the fire. Anyone who came there now--with the emptiness everywhere, the ruins overgrown with thorny weeds, the land crumbly with weathered ash--would believe they had been sent to a kind of purgatory. Surely Ondun had turned His back on this place.

  Worst of all was the central hill that overlooked both sides of Ishalem--a barren hill now, showing no sign of Aiden's sacred Arkship. It was gone, all gone... but his faith remained.

  He wept as he recalled the city's former glory. That last night was so vivid in his mind--the bright flames, the collapsing

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  Urecari church, the precious amulet he had gained and then lost again--that his scars began to throb. How could Aiden have let this happen?

  Hannes saw only a few huts and tents erected by the most tenacious pilgrims, widely separated from one another in different parts of what had been the great city. By now he had expected the city to be rebuilt, loyal Aidenists reclaiming the ground, constructing a new metropolis to replace what the Urecari had destroyed. Instead this was a damned place, shunned by both religions. He didn't know how long he could bear to stay here, but he knew he must.

  Finding a sheltered spot without too much ash or debris, he used stones and scraps of collapsed building timbers to make a modest shelter. He kept to himself, avoiding the other pilgrims. If they were Urecari, he had no interest in talking to them; if they were Aidenists, they would look at his stolen clothing, assume he was a heretic, and surely throw rocks at him. In order to survive, he decided to steal food from other pilgrim camps, killing a few more Urecari if necessary. He would wait until nightfall.

  At dusk, when the Urecari were at their sunset prayers, Hannes crept out from his shelter and was startled to see five soldiers on horseback--Uraban guards, armed with curved swords and angry expressions. Before he could duck back into hiding, they spotted him, and he heard the rumble of hooves, the snorting of horses.

  Hannes stood to face the circle of riders, letting his shoulders slump, averting his face. Though his heart pounded and he felt great fear, he fell back on his false persona and blurted out his words. "I am but a faithful pilgrim, come all the way from Olabar so that I may lay my eyes on Ishalem." He had no qualms

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  about lying, since lying to a follower of Urec was not exactly lying.

  The kel of the Urecari group sneered down at him, unimpressed. "Any man may say he's a pilgrim."

  "For what other purpose would I come here?" Hannes wiped his blackened hands on his pantaloons. "What else is t
here, but the memory of Ishalem?"

  The kel had an uneven black beard, and his white uniform was now gray, ash stained and improperly washed too many times. "We have orders to arrest any beggars or lone wanderers. Such a man--or men--caused great harm across Uraba, and you fit the description."

  Hannes tried to keep his voice from cracking. "A man alone, on a pilgrimage to Ishalem? That is your only description of this criminal?"

  "It's good enough for us." The kel gestured to his men and spurred his horse forward.

  "Wait, wait!" Hannes could not let these men take him. Only a few more miles, and he would be back in Tierra. "I received a vision in a dream to come to Ishalem. I gave up everything to make the journey. Ondun Himself must have guided me."

  "Then Ondun Himself guided you into our arms," the kel said. Some of the weary and hard-bitten soldiers looked sympathetic to Hannes's story, but their captain was uninterested. "Our instructions are to take every suspicious person into custody."

  Two of his soldiers slid down from their mounts, pulling out leather thongs, and though Hannes struggled, they bound his hands behind his back. "But I have done nothing. I am innocent! I live only to serve Ondun." And that was the truth.

  The kel merely shrugged. Three additional riders from

  FUN

  the kel's scout party came up, leading five more pilgrims who had been similarly arrested. "You will be taken to a slave galley in the old Uraban harbor and be shipped across the Middle sea to work at Gremurr. You will serve Ondun--in the mines."

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  Missinia Soldanate

  The caravan toiled across the grassy hills toward where the floating sand coracle would be built at the edge of the Great Desert. Saan was comfortable with the rocking, swaying gait of the slow moving pack animals; he imagined it might be like the rolling deck of a ship in restless waters.

 

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